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Authors: Greg Bardsley

Tags: #Humour

Cash Out (7 page)

BOOK: Cash Out
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There was a cuteness to her. A freshness. She was barefoot, sandals kicked off, jeans rolled up.

She hollered, “You want one?”

“Huh?”

She yanked a can of Tecate off its plastic ring. “You want one?”

I still have that can.

Two years later, Kate and I sat right where we'd first met. She had her head on my lap, and I was running a finger along her hairline, looking down at her, determined to reassure her. We were getting married in a month, and we'd just had our worst fight ever—about my career as a reporter, its inability to provide stability for a family, and the difference between chasing a dream and being responsible. The conversation—or yelling match, as it turned out—in my Toyota had quickly disintegrated into a nasty attack-defend flurry in which everything from “You always wanted to change me” to “You don't really love me” came flying out before we could think to stop.

It had been a great two years, except for the past three months. The closer we got to the wedding date, the more things between us had unraveled. Of course, it had taken all that time to realize what was happening here. We were getting married, and Kate was horrified that someday we'd end up just like her parents—divorced, with a child.

Kate spent her childhood alone, with a TV.

She looked up at me, sniffling. “You're not gonna leave me?”

I stroked her head. “Kate, I'll never leave you.”

She started to cry. “Even when things get shitty?”

I wiped the tears off her cheeks. “I'm in this for the rest of my life.”

“Even if you get sick of me?”

“Even if I get sick of you.”

She looked up, those blue eyes melting me, the purity drilling into the center of my heart, and I was certain of two things: I loved this woman more than anything, and I would never let her down.

S
even years later:

ANNE
: OMG, my face is so flushed right now

DAN
: That's because you know I'm turned on

ANNE
: Well that and the fact I can't stop thinking about you

DAN
: God, you are so bad

ANNE
: Whatev . . . ;)

DAN
: So did you think about me?

ANNE
: Okay, now my face is getting like cherry red

DAN
: Did you?

[long pause]

ANNE
: Yeah

DAN
: The big moment

ANNE
: Yeah?

DAN
: Did you have one?

ANNE
: Um . . . yeah

DAN
: And were you thinking of me?

ANNE
: I can't believe I'm telling you this

DAN
: You were, huh?

ANNE
: Uh-huh :)

DAN
: And??????

ANNE
: IT . . .

ANNE
: . . . WAS . . .

ANNE
: A

ANNE
: M

ANNE
: A

ANNE
: Z

ANNE
: I

ANNE
: N

ANNE
: G

DAN
: Whoa

ANNE
: It was like you were inside me last night

DAN
: Whoa

ANNE
: Uh-huh . . .

DAN
: God, I want you

ANNE
: Are you still hard, Dan?

DAN
: Oh, yeah.

ANNE
: Good :)

My worst moment, hands down.

God, I am scum.

D
riving home from the police department in the predawn mist, I'm thinking about it all, realizing how close I've just come to letting Kate down. Writing that crap with Anne. Soiling the spirit of my marriage. Jeopardizing a million dollars just to leak gossip to a reporter. Not to mention nearly getting locked up for assault and battery. I can't imagine anything more destructive, anything that would destroy the trust Kate had developed over the past nine years, that would send my boys along the same damaging trajectory their mother experienced as a child.

I need to keep my family intact. I just don't know where to start.

I
open the front door a crack and peer in. The faintest hint of dawn has crept through the blinds, the colors muted. In the corner, in my leather armchair, is Rod's silhouette, his heavy brow profiled prominently, his posture upright but relaxed, his legs planted open on the floor.

“Hey.” I open the door a little more. “It's me.”

“No shit.” He doesn't move. “Could hear your car two blocks away.”

I have to admit, it feels good to see Rod in my front room. Rod is never afraid of anything, and being around that confidence, that strength and courage, is reassuring. These assholes, whoever they are—they're in for a surprise if they haven't accounted for Rod.

He nods to the back of the house. “Go.” His voice is cool as granite. “I'll pour you something.” He rises and strides toward the kitchen. “Coffee or a cold one?”

I limp across the living room. At the hallway entrance I nearly trip on a toy motorcycle. My house is a freaking minefield of boy toys. Coffee sounds pretty damn good, but after everything that's happened, all that's racing through my mind, I know what I really want.

“Cold one,” I whisper.

In the boys' room, I stand between their beds and gaze down at them. Ben is stretched on his side, twisted blankets snaking through his legs, his back arched dramatically, his belly coming through the pajamas, belly button showing, his chin up—just as he slept as a newborn. I squat down, bite my lip from the pain, and run the back of my hand along his cheek—smooth, warm, and perfect. He's brought to bed a small truck, a plastic lion, and a framed photo of me from the living room. I kiss him lightly on the temple.

My boy Benny.

I turn and look at Harry—at his blond hair, fair skin like his mom's—and start to tear up. I've come so close to scarring him.
Daddy attacked a nice man at the sandbox.
The thought makes my stomach turn.

I gather myself in the hallway, taking deep breaths. I hear Rod opening beer bottles, the caps bouncing on my counter. I take another deep breath, exhale slowly. I hobble down the hallway to our bedroom, inadvertently kick a Hot Wheel down the hallway, where it slams against the baseboard. I look in; Kate is asleep, surrounded by extra pillows, the phone a foot away from her face.

Loyal Kate. I back out, careful not to wake her.

When I get the kitchen, Rod is sitting at the table, nursing a Modelo. When he sees my eyes, he walks over, grabs my shoulders, and shakes me. Affection, Rod Stone style. “It's gonna be all right, Danny.” He shakes me harder and brings me in for a hug—an awkward man-hug, chests pushed out to limit the intimacy, big hard thumps on the back. “Whatever this is, we'll figure it out.”

We sit down and take our beers, leave the lights off. A sliver of sunlight streaks through the kitchen blinds and crosses his face, illuminating a gray eye and the scar on his left cheek. I take another deep breath, trying to regain my composure. He takes a swig and studies me, eyes narrowing, neck and head going rigid, as if he's saying,
Who did this to my buddy?

O
f the many times I've seen Rod fight, one of the few times I've seen him get emotional was in high school, more than twenty years ago.

It was actually one of my fights.

Ninth grade. I'm a lowly freshman still getting lost trying to find my locker. Two juniors sneak up behind me, lift me up by the legs, laughing. A longhair with tinted glasses keeps yelling, “Freshman . . . freshman,” like he's proclaiming me to the school. They're laughing, I'm laughing, students are laughing. Not a big deal. Easy hazing. Until I lose my balance, grab for leverage, and end up stabbing my No. 2 pencil into the forearm of the longhair. Unintentionally.

“What the fuck?” The longhair looks down at me and pushes me hard, bringing his fists up. “Fucking stabbed me, you little fuck.”

Kids swarm around us. My heart spasms.

Oh fuck.

An English teacher with a surfer cut saunters to his door, leans against the frame, and watches, arms folded. Guys are hollering, “Fight! Fight! Fight!” Big circle around us. Pretty girls watching from a distance.

“Dude, it's cool.” My heart is pounding. “I don't wanna fight. It was an accident.”

“Like hell it was.” He comes toward me, and I back up. “Fucking stabbed me.”

FIGHT! FIGHT! FIGHT!

“Little fucking new-wave piece of shit.”

FIGHT . . . FIGHT . . . FIGHT.

“Hit him.”

“Waste him, Mark.”

He charges and takes a swing, and I duck. He misses badly, and I roll behind him on the asphalt, scramble back up. I feel like I'm about to cry, but I can't.

God, please don't let me cry.

People are screaming, happy about the excitement. Longhair turns around and comes after me, at which point someone yanks me back. It's Rod, my best buddy. Goes straight for Longhair, swipes away a punch, lands a right into his glasses, cuts the guy in the eye, sends shards of tinted lens into his brow, grabs and slams him onto the ground. Place goes silent as my freshman buddy Rod puts this junior into an “arm bar,” ready to make his elbow do unnatural things.

Longhair groans and struggles.

Rod's eyes are wild. I've never seen him so angry. “Say you're sorry, burnout.”

Longhair struggles again.

Rod applies more pressure. “Say you're sorry.”

Nothing.

Snap.

It took three minutes for the English teacher and two seniors to pull Rod off the screaming Longhair. And when they did, all Rod could say was, “My family.”

I was Rod's family. No one else. Just me.

I
've just told Rod the whole story. He's walking back to the fridge, fingering two more Modelos. “I know a guy at the gym.” He pops the caps. “Does some side work for the suits. You know, security.”

Rod himself used to do that kind of work. He had a nice gig doing weekends for some of the biggest names in technology and venture capital. Easy work. But it wasn't him. Now he's a full-time mixed martial artist signed to a six-figure contract with the UFC—a premier athlete training with some of the best MMA fighters in the world.

Rod glances at the clock on my microwave. 6:10. “I'll call my buddy later this morning.”

I take a sip. The alcohol and the Vicodin seem to be mixing nicely because my crotch feels okay for the first time in nearly a day. “What are you thinking?”

Rod looks out to my backyard. The lawn is littered with toy trucks, balls, and plastic dinosaurs. “I'm thinking, this bald guy? Probably has some connections to the security crowd, and someone in that circle is paying this guy to fuck with you.” Rod pauses, thinks about it. “Doesn't sound like an amateur.” He glances at me, stoic, and returns his gaze to the yard. “You got lucky, Danny. Real lucky.” He shakes his head, exhales hard. “Never do that again.”

I take a pull off my Modelo. “I wasn't thinking.”

“You're lucky your friend Calhoun was there.”

I roll my eyes.

“Screwed things up for you, but probably saved your life.”

It's hard to accept it, but I'm starting to realize: No Calhoun there, it would have been just me and Baldy, and chances are I would've been pounded to jelly.

“Guess I can't blame you.” He takes a swig, keeps his gaze on the yard. Rod loves my boys—more than anything, maybe. “I'd have killed him.”

“So I'm not crazy.”

“ 'Course not.” He sighs. “Problem is, with a guy like that, if he's what I think he is—a pro? If you redid that sandbox fight twenty times, he would've killed you the other nineteen.”

My stomach sinks.

“I mean, the guy pulled a knife. But, hey.” He lifts his Modelo toward me. Instinctively, I clank my bottle with his. “You took care of your people, and he's beat up.”

My mind is swimming, but I have to admit it's satisfying, knowing I got the best of him.

Rod says, “What about the guys at FlowBid?”

“Which guys?”

“The security team for Fitzroy.”

“Yeah?”

“You think you could trust them? Maybe they'd tell you if they're having problems on their end.” He pauses. “You know, if someone sent a guy like that asshole after
you
, what are they pulling on the big cheese himself?”

I hadn't thought of that. Fitzroy's security team consists of two relentlessly congenial guys with law-enforcement and military backgrounds. I've always joked to Kate that they're the nicest guys you'll ever meet . . . who are ready to break your neck should you endanger the merchandise, i.e., Fitzroy. I've never witnessed one incident that even remotely required their services, but ever since we went public and amassed those billions, the FlowBid board of directors has required the security detail. Unlike other companies with deeper “bench strength,” FlowBid is seen by many analysts as a one-man show. In other words, if Fitzroy bites the dust, so will the company's market cap, not to mention the investments of all our shareholders, which includes a handful of very heavily invested (and rich) people. Regardless, the fact that the board thinks Fitzroy needs security always gave me a chuckle. Until today.

“Check them out,” Rod says. “See what kind of information they volunteer. Hell, maybe you'll feel safe telling them about this bald guy.”

I shake my head. “Can't do that.” I almost laugh, because I don't think Rod realizes how easily rumors travel in corporate. “I have to last two more days without creating a stir. Those guys hear about Baldy, the fact I attacked a man? . . . No way.”

BOOK: Cash Out
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